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CD(4) FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual CD(4)
NAMEcd - SCSI CD-ROM driver
SYNOPSISdevicecdoptions"CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS=3"options"CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS=11"DESCRIPTION
The cd driver provides support for a SCSI CD-ROM (Compact Disc-Read Only
Memory) drive. In an attempt to look like a regular disk, the cd driver
synthesizes a partition table, with one partition covering the entire
CD-ROM. It is possible to modify this partition table using
disklabel(8), but it will only last until the CD-ROM is unmounted. In
general the interfaces are similar to those described by ad(4) and da(4).
As the SCSI adapter is probed during boot, the SCSI bus is scanned for
devices. Any devices found which answer as CDROM (type 5) or WORM (type
4) type devices will be `attached' to the cd driver. Prior to
FreeBSD 2.1, the first device found will be attached as cd0 the next,
cd1, etc. Beginning in FreeBSD 2.1 it is possible to specify what cd
unit a device should come on line as; refer to scsi(4) for details on
kernel configuration.
The system utility disklabel(8) may be used to read the synthesized disk
label structure, which will contain correct figures for the size of the
CD-ROM should that information be required.
KERNEL CONFIGURATION
Any number of CD-ROM devices may be attached to the system regardless of
system configuration as all resources are dynamically allocated.
IOCTLS
The following ioctl(2) calls which apply to SCSI CD-ROM drives are
defined in the header files <sys/cdio.h> and <sys/disklabel.h>.
DIOCGDINFO
DIOCSDINFO (struct disklabel) Read or write the in-core copy of
the disklabel for the drive. The disklabel is
initialized with information read from the scsi
inquiry commands, and should be the same as the
information printed at boot. This structure is
defined in disklabel(5).
CDIOCCAPABILITY (struct ioc_capability) Retrieve information from
the drive on what features it supports. The
information is returned in the following structure:
struct ioc_capability {
u_long play_function;
#define CDDOPLAYTRK 0x00000001
/* Can play tracks/index */
#define CDDOPLAYMSF 0x00000002
/* Can play msf to msf */
#define CDDOPLAYBLOCKS 0x00000004
/* Can play range of blocks */
#define CDDOPAUSE 0x00000100
/* Output can be paused */
#define CDDORESUME 0x00000200
/* Output can be resumed */
#define CDDORESET 0x00000400
/* Drive can be completely reset */
#define CDDOSTART 0x00000800
/* Audio can be started */
#define CDDOSTOP 0x00001000
/* Audio can be stopped */
#define CDDOPITCH 0x00002000
/* Audio pitch can be changed */
u_long routing_function;
#define CDREADVOLUME 0x00000001
/* Volume settings can be read */
#define CDSETVOLUME 0x00000002
/* Volume settings can be set */
#define CDSETMONO 0x00000100
/* Output can be set to mono */
#define CDSETSTEREO 0x00000200
/* Output can be set to stereo (def) */
#define CDSETLEFT 0x00000400
/* Output can be set to left only */
#define CDSETRIGHT 0x00000800
/* Output can be set to right only */
#define CDSETMUTE 0x00001000
/* Output can be muted */
#define CDSETPATCH 0x00008000
/* Direct routing control allowed */
u_long special_function;
#define CDDOEJECT 0x00000001
/* The tray can be opened */
#define CDDOCLOSE 0x00000002
/* The tray can be closed */
#define CDDOLOCK 0x00000004
/* The tray can be locked */
#define CDREADHEADER 0x00000100
/* Can read Table of Contents */
#define CDREADENTRIES 0x00000200
/* Can read TOC Entries */
#define CDREADSUBQ 0x00000200
/* Can read Subchannel info */
#define CDREADRW 0x00000400
/* Can read subcodes R-W */
#define CDHASDEBUG 0x00004000
/* The tray has dynamic debugging */
};
CDIOCPLAYTRACKS (struct ioc_play_track) Start audio playback given a
track address and length. The structure is defined
as follows:
struct ioc_play_track
{
u_char start_track;
u_char start_index;
u_char end_track;
u_char end_index;
};
CDIOCPLAYBLOCKS (struct ioc_play_blocks) Start audio playback given
a block address and length. The structure is
defined as follows:
struct ioc_play_blocks
{
int blk;
int len;
};
CDIOCPLAYMSF (struct ioc_play_msf) Start audio playback given a
`minutes-seconds-frames' address and length. The
structure is defined as follows:
struct ioc_play_msf
{
u_char start_m;
u_char start_s;
u_char start_f;
u_char end_m;
u_char end_s;
u_char end_f;
};
CDIOCREADSUBCHANNEL (struct ioc_read_subchannel) Read information from
the subchannel at the location specified by this
structure:
struct ioc_read_subchannel {
u_char address_format;
#define CD_LBA_FORMAT 1
#define CD_MSF_FORMAT 2
u_char data_format;
#define CD_SUBQ_DATA 0
#define CD_CURRENT_POSITION 1
#define CD_MEDIA_CATALOG 2
#define CD_TRACK_INFO 3
u_char track;
int data_len;
struct cd_sub_channel_info *data;
};
CDIOREADTOCHEADER (struct ioc_toc_header) Return summary information
about the table of contents for the mounted CD-ROM.
The information is returned into the following
structure:
struct ioc_toc_header {
u_short len;
u_char starting_track;
u_char ending_track;
};
CDIOREADTOCENTRYS (struct ioc_read_toc_entry) Return information from
the table of contents entries mentioned. (Yes, this
command name is misspelled.) The argument structure
is defined as follows:
struct ioc_read_toc_entry {
u_char address_format;
u_char starting_track;
u_short data_len;
struct cd_toc_entry *data;
};
The requested data is written into an area of size
data_len and pointed to by data.
CDIOCSETPATCH (struct ioc_patch) Attach various audio channels to
various output channels. The argument structure is
defined thusly:
struct ioc_patch {
u_char patch[4];
/* one for each channel */
};
CDIOCGETVOL
CDIOCSETVOL (struct ioc_vol) Get (set) information about the
volume settings of the output channels. The
argument structure is as follows:
struct ioc_vol
{
u_char vol[4];
/* one for each channel */
};
CDIOCSETMONO Patch all output channels to all source channels.
CDIOCSETSTEREO Patch left source channel to the left output channel
and the right source channel to the right output
channel.
CDIOCSETMUTE Mute output without changing the volume settings.
CDIOCSETLEFT
CDIOCSETRIGHT Attach both output channels to the left (right)
source channel.
CDIOCSETDEBUG
CDIOCCLRDEBUG Turn on (off) debugging for the appropriate device.
CDIOCPAUSE
CDIOCRESUME Pause (resume) audio play, without resetting the
location of the read-head.
CDIOCRESET Reset the drive.
CDIOCSTART
CDIOCSTOP Tell the drive to spin-up (-down) the CD-ROM.
CDIOCALLOW
CDIOCPREVENT Tell the drive to allow (prevent) manual ejection of
the CD-ROM disc. Not all drives support this
feature.
CDIOCEJECT Eject the CD-ROM.
CDIOCCLOSE Tell the drive to close its door and load the media.
Not all drives support this feature.
CDIOCPITCH (struct ioc_pitch) For drives that support it, this
command instructs the drive to play the audio at a
faster or slower rate than normal. Values of speed
between -32767 and -1 result in slower playback; a
zero value indicates normal speed; and values from 1
to 32767 give faster playback. Drives with less
than 16 bits of resolution will silently ignore
less-significant bits. The structure is defined
thusly:
struct ioc_pitch
{
short speed;
};
NOTES
When a CD-ROM is changed in a drive controlled by the cd driver, then the
act of changing the media will invalidate the disklabel and information
held within the kernel. To stop corruption, all accesses to the device
will be discarded until there are no more open file descriptors
referencing the device. During this period, all new open attempts will
be rejected. When no more open file descriptors reference the device,
the first next open will load a new set of parameters (including
disklabel) for the drive.
The audio code in the cd driver only support SCSI-2 standard audio
commands. As many CD-ROM manufacturers have not followed the standard,
there are many CD-ROM drives for which audio will not work. Some work is
planned to support some of the more common `broken' CD-ROM drives;
however, this is not yet under way.
The cd driver attempts to automatically determine whether the drive it is
talking to supports 6 byte or 10 byte MODE SENSE/MODE SELECT operations.
Many SCSI drives only support 6 byte commands, and ATAPI drives only
support 10 byte commands. The cd driver first attempts to determine
whether the protocol in use typically supports 6 byte commands by issuing
a CAM Path Inquiry CCB. It will then default to 6 byte or 10 byte
commands as appropriate. After that, the cd driver defaults to using 6
byte commands (assuming the protocol the drive speaks claims to support 6
byte commands), until one fails with a SCSI ILLEGAL REQUEST error. Then
it tries the 10 byte version of the command to see if that works instead.
Users can change the default via per-drive sysctl variables and loader
tunables. The variable names are the same in both instances:
kern.cam.cd.%d.minimum_cmd_size
Where ``%d'' is the unit number of the drive in question. Valid minimum
command sizes are 6 and 10. Any value above 6 will be rounded to 10, and
any value below 6 will be rounded to 6.
CHANGER OPERATION
This driver has built-in support for LUN-based CD changers. A LUN-based
CD changer is a drive that can hold two or more CDs, but only has one CD
player mechanism. Each CD in the drive shows up as a separate logical
unit on the SCSI bus. The cd driver automatically recognizes LUN-based
changers, and routes commands for changers through an internal scheduler.
The scheduler prevents changer "thrashing", which is caused by sending
commands to different LUNs in the changer at the same time.
The scheduler honors minimum and maximum time quanta that the driver will
spend on a particular LUN. The minimum time is the guaranteed minimum
amount of time that the driver will spend on a given LUN, even if there
is no outstanding I/O for that LUN. The maximum time is the maximum
amount of time the changer will spend on a LUN if there is outstanding
I/O for another LUN. If there is no outstanding I/O for another LUN, the
driver will allow indefinite access to a given LUN.
The minimum and maximum time quanta are configurable via kernel options
and also via sysctl and kernel tunable variables. The kernel options
are:
options"CHANGER_MIN_BUSY_SECONDS=3"options"CHANGER_MAX_BUSY_SECONDS=11"
The sysctl/kernel tunable variables are:
kern.cam.cd.changer.min_busy_secondskern.cam.cd.changer.max_busy_seconds
It is suggested that the user try experimenting with the minimum and
maximum timeouts via the sysctl variables to arrive at the proper values
for your changer. Once you have settled on the proper timeouts for your
changer, you can then put them in your kernel config file.
If your system does have a LUN-based changer, you may notice that the
probe messages for the various LUNs of the changer will continue to
appear while the boot process is going on. This is normal, and is caused
by the changer scheduling code.
FILES/dev/cd[0-9][a-h] raw mode CD-ROM devices
DIAGNOSTICS
None.
SEE ALSOda(4), scsi(4), disklabel(5), disklabel(8), cd(9)BUGS
The names of the structures used for the third argument to ioctl() were
poorly chosen, and a number of spelling errors have survived in the names
of the ioctl() commands.
There is no mechanism currently to set different minimum and maximum
timeouts for different CD changers; the timeout values set by the kernel
options or the sysctl variables apply to all LUN-based CD changers in the
system. It is possible to implement such support, but the sysctl
implementation at least would be rather inelegant, because of the current
inability of the sysctl code to handle the addition of nodes after
compile time. Thus, it would take one dynamically sized sysctl variable
and a userland utility to get/set the timeout values. Implementation of
separate timeouts for different CD devices in the kernel config file
would likely require modification of config(8) to support the two
timeouts when hardwiring cd devices.
HISTORY
This cd driver is based upon the cd driver written by Julian Elischer,
which appeared in 386BSD-0.1. The CAM version of the cd driver was
written by Kenneth Merry and first appeared in FreeBSD 3.0.
FreeBSD 11.0-PRERELEASE September 2, 2003 FreeBSD 11.0-PRERELEASE